Francis Lui soared into rarified territory with Speed Dragon’s spectacular G3 January Cup Handicap (1800m) victory at Happy Valley on Wednesday night (14 January), becoming only the sixth trainer in Hong Kong, China racing history to saddle 1,000 wins or more in the jurisdiction.
Renowned as the ultimate quiet achiever, Lui joined John Moore (1,735), John Size (1,629), Tony Cruz (1,583), Caspar Fownes (1,196) and Ricky Yiu (1,082) in one of the city’s most exclusive clubs when Speed Dragon (117lb) charged from last on the home turn under Lyle Hewitson to score by half a length from Huge Wave (116lb) and last year’s January Cup victor Helene Feeling (125lb) in 1m 48s.
Hong Kong champion trainer in 2023/24 and famed as the horseman behind 10-time Group 1 winner Golden Sixty’s supreme career, Lui has been involved in Hong Kong racing for more than 50 years, graduating from The Hong Kong Jockey Club’s Apprentice Jockeys’ School and riding 36 winners between 1975 and 1982, and later becoming an assistant trainer before receiving his own licence to train in 1996/97.
Cap Ferrat last season gave Lui a second BMW Hong Kong Derby (2000m) trophy, five years after Golden Sixty prevailed in 2020, adding to a stable honour roll which includes the Group 1 achievement of Lucky Bubbles and a string of other prestigious races.
“I feel very happy. It’s a big number (1,000) and it’s not easy. Golden Sixty is special, but every winner to me is very important and for the owners,” Lui said.
Referring to Speed Dragon’s win, Lui said: “Always these races, a light weight is favourable. It all depends on the programme, but I think he’ll race at both Happy Valley and Sha Tin.”
Needing two winners entering the meeting to reach the 1,000-win milestone, Lui struck with Winning Money (126lb) in the Class 4 Monaco Handicap (1200m) under Zac Purton before Hewitson’s unflustered display on Speed Dragon.





